The Parkinson Family of Wrenbury

The story that was passed down to my mother was
that the Parkinson family were "gentlemen farmers" from Cheshire.
There was also a story about one of the Parkinsons being known
locally as "Mad Parkinson" although we have no documentary knowledge
or proof of this.

What we can be sure of is that the Parkinson family
resided in the village of Wrenbury and the nearby hamlet of Wrenbury
Heath for a period of around 150 years from the middle of the
18th century to the end of the 19th. The first three generations
were tenant farmers, cultivating land in Wrenbury Heath. However,
the later generations were merely agricultural labourers and by
the end of the 19th century there were no Parkinsons left in the
village, all having moved elsewhere to find work. One line of
the family moved to Crewe but the majority moved outside the area.

The first Parkinson in the Wrenbury area was John
Parkinson, who would appear to have moved to Wrenbury as a young
man some time in the 1740s. It is not clear where he came from
although the area around Market Drayton or Whitchurch is a possibility
as there is some evidence of earlier Parkinson families in that
area.

The earliest documented evidence of a Parkinson
family in Wrenbury are two burials recorded, that of Ann Parkinson
(buried 1 July 1748) and Elizabeth Parkinson (buried 3 July 1751).
Either of these could have been John's mother, but is most likely
to be Ann this was the name of John's first daughter.

John had two marriages. His first wife, Sarah,
give birth to two children, Ann in 1758 and John in February 1761.
Sarah, however, died giving birth to her second child and John
subsequently married Mary, who had seven children of her own.
These were Elizabeth (b.1763), Susannah (b. 1765) William (1766)
Thomas (1769), Samuel (b. 1771), a second Thomas (1773), George
(1777). John died in December 1796 and Mary in December 1799.

Of John's children only Thomas b.1773 and George
were still alive and living in Wrenbury at the time of the 1841
census - more about them shortly. Of the others the following
is known:

Ann Parkinson (b. 1758) gave birth to a child, Sarah
in December 1778. The child died when less than a week old and
was buried on Dec 26th 1778. After this there is no further record
of Ann.

There is no record at all of John Parkinson other
than his baptism in 1761, so he presumably survived.

Elizabeth Parkinson (b. 1763) had a child outside
of marriage called John born September 12th 1796 but he died in
infancy and was buried on Christmas Day 1796, only 4 days after
his grandfather, John.

William Parkinson (b. 1766) died in May 1803 in
Wrenbury. There is no evidence of him having had a wife or children.

It is not known why there were two Thomas Parkinsons.
However, a Thomas Parkinson was buried in Wrenbury on Sep 6, 1782.
This may well have been the elder Thomas (b. 1769).

There is no knowledge of what happened to Samuel
Parkinson (b. 1771). There are no recorded deaths so he may have
moved away.

George Parkinson (b. 1777) was an earthenware dealer.
He married Anne and had at least two children with her. He remained
in the Wrenbury area at least until the 1830s (when he was living
in a cottage in Wrenbury village). By 1841, however, he had moved
to Nantwich.

Thomas Parkinson (b. 1773 - my g.g.g.g.grandfather)
would appear to have, at some point, taken over the family farming
business from his father. He married Catherine (1768-1837) and
together they had nine children - Mary (1791), Elizabeth (1794),
Thomas (1796), John (1799), Ann (1801), William (1803), Samuel
(1806 - my g.g.g.grandfather), James (1810) and Hannah (1812).

In
1841 Thomas was still farming land in Wrenbury Heath. Tithe maps
from the time show him renting a house and gardens on the South
side of the road to Sound from landowners Maria Catherine Edgar
and Mrs Hewitt (marked 1 on the map). He also rented two adjacent
fields as well as six fields along the Wrenbury-Ravensmoor road
from the same landowners plus a further field opposite his house
from John Cross Starkey (the Starkey family were local landowners
residing at Wrenbury Hall). The house no longer exists and indeed,
the fields along the Sound road now have houses built on them.
However, the fields on the Ravensmoor Road are still farmed. The
fields farmed by Thomas are marked in yellow on the second map
below.

To link to the e-maps of the fields farmed by Thomas
Parkinson, click on the maps.

Two
of Thomas's sons, Samuel and James lived in the vicinity. Samuel
was renting a house and two fields a little further up the Ravensmoor
road (marked 2 on the map), whilst James, having taken up a career
as a shoemaker, was sharing a rented property with George and
Thomas Nevett, also on the Ravensmoor road (marked 3 on the map).

Samuel's eldest son, John had three children with
his wife Sarah but died relatively young, sometime between 1778
and 1881.

Thomas, the second eldest (b. 1835), grew up to
be an agricultural labourer. He married Elizabeth Williamson (b.
1834), who he would have known since they were very young children,
as both Thomas and Elizabeth are listed as young children in the
1841 census living only two houses away from each other. In the
1871 census Thomas is listed as living with his father-in-law
Samuel Williamson at 77 Wrenbury Heath. By 1881, however, he had
moved to Baddiley, another small village a mile or two further
up the Ravensmoor road.

Henry Parkinson (b.1852) married Catherine Park
and had son, Walter (b. 1893). Henry died in February 1905 from
injuries sustained whilst working a circular saw (thanks are due
to Henry's great-grand-daughter, Sheila Wilford for this information).

My
great-grandfather, Walter Parkinson was born in Wrenbury but moved
to Bangor in North Wales in the 1880s to work on the railways.
He married Edith Alice Gregson on July 16, 1892. In the 1901 census
Walter is still living in Bangor when he was described as a Civil
Engineers Clerk. By 1911 he had moved to Sarn Faban, Anglesey
(Llanfair PG), when he is described as being a railway clerk.
According to my mother, Walter eventually rose to become a station
master, either at Bangor or Conway. Walter and Edith had 6 children,
Ada (b. 1894), Bruce (b. 1897 - my grandfather), John (also known
as Jack - b. 1900), Walter (b. 1904), Daisy (b. 1906) and May
(who died in her childhood). Walter's wife, Edith was considered
to be very strict and didn't get on with her daughter-in-law,
Evies. She ran a guest house at some point during her life and
after Walter's death she married a second time, to a Jack Jones.

My Grandfather, Bruce (pictured right - in the
centre of the photo), was a joiner. He married Evies Anna-Beer
Ramsay and lived his adult life in the Manchester area. He died
in the 1950s.